Die For You (Book Club Boys #3) Read Online Max Walker

Categories Genre: M-M Romance Tags Authors: Series: Book Club Boys Series by Max Walker
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Total pages in book: 77
Estimated words: 71212 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 356(@200wpm)___ 285(@250wpm)___ 237(@300wpm)
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“Everyone move away from the windows and doors,” I said, my words dropping in the room like a bomb. Tristan looked at me with wide, fearful eyes.

“It’s a bug, right? Let me see if I rest—”

“Oh my God,” Noah said, pointing at the screen. “Look.”

A shadow appeared on-screen. A wraith cutting across the lawn. A person dressed in all black, a ski mask covering their face, and a long and bulky black trench coat hiding their figure. The shadow walked down the stone path, a confidence in their strut with a hand in the pocket of the coat.

I went for the concealed gun strapped in my holster and whipped it out, raising it up toward the door. Someone behind me yelled, the piercing screech cutting past the sound of blood pumping into my skull.

“No one move,” I said as my eyes dropped to the knob. Maybe the fucker didn’t know there was a six-foot-three bodyguard waiting with a gun on the other side of the door. And if they didn’t?

Well, they were about to find out.

5

TRISTAN HALL

My worst nightmare was coming true. This sick fuck was about to walk through that door, expecting to grab me but instead walking face-first into Gabriel’s gun. Jess and Tia were pressed up against the wall, with Noah and Jake on their left, all four of them looking terrified out of their minds. Yvette was on the floor being shielded by her boyfriend while Colton, Steven, and Eric were each holding items to use as a defense. I wasn’t sure where Steven got that knife from so quickly, but I was slightly grateful for it.

Did the doorknob just jiggle? It was locked, but could this person force it open? Would they?

I looked to the television screen. The night-vision filter was on, casting my front lawn in an eerie white shade. Like footage from a ghost hunter’s vault. But…

The video was on a loop. My stalker was walking back down the path, just like he had moments before. He reached the door, worked the lock for a moment, and then he opened it, stepping inside. I hadn’t seen that part earlier.

“Wait,” I said, surprised my vocal cords still worked. “This is an old video.”

“Huh?” Gabriel asked over his shoulder, his attention pinned to the front door.

“It’s not from tonight. Look, none of your cars are there. This was done some other night.” My stomach twisted even tighter as realization set it. “They were in here. The Midnight Chemist was inside my house while I slept.”

My knees started to tremble, but I managed to get them working enough to carry me toward the kitchen sink, where I threw up from the raw fear.

Eric and Noah appeared at my side. My best friends. My boys. We were supposed to be enjoying our late twenties together, going to bars and movies and weddings and triple dates. We’d already been through so much together, and now this?

“Gabriel is going around the perimeter,” Eric said, his hand rubbing the spot between my shoulder blades as Noah poured me a fresh glass of ice water.

“He was in here,” I said. It felt like a bucket of spiders had been dumped over my head. A thousand invisible and tiny legs were crawling against my skin, down my spine, inside of my chest. This was a kind of fear I had never known before. I looked around my kitchen, not trusting a single inch of my own home. As if he were crouched in my cupboard, waiting until I was alone to crawl out and have his way with me. “He came in here while I slept.”

I leaned back over the sink as my stomach did a summersault, but nothing came out.

“Maybe this video is going to be what reveals their identity,” Noah helpfully suggested, although I could hear the fear cause his words to tremble.

“Noah’s right,” Eric said, his voice a little more steady. I stood up and leaned against the sink, looking at my best friends washed in the orange light of my kitchen, their expressions revealing the thoughts they didn’t want to say out loud. “They might have gotten too confident. Is there a way you can see how that video got on your television?”

I huffed a breath. My lungs felt like they could hold a fraction of the air they were supposed to. “I might be able to. ‘Might’ being the key word.”

Writing wasn’t my only passion. Since I was a kid, technology always had a vise grip around my interests. I loved tinkering with codes and computers, learning an entirely new language that I’d likely never be able to use in my books but that I’d used plenty of times otherwise. I could possibly see where the hell that video came from, but it was going to take some time and mental capacity to pull off, neither of which I felt like I had in the moment.



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